
Music Has the Right to Children
In 1998, Boards of Canada released Music Has the Right to Children - a hazy, analog dreamworld that feels like childhood memories.
In 1998, Boards of Canada released Music Has the Right to Children - a hazy, analog dreamworld that feels like childhood memories.
In 1993, PJ Harvey released Rid of Me - a raw, furious and unrelenting album that stripped skin from bone, leaving nerves exposed.
In 1991, My Bloody Valentine released Loveless - a woozy, disorienting fever dream that reshaped the sonic landscape.
In 1999, Sigur Rós released Ágætis Byrjun - a tidal dreamscape of a record that swells from glacial stillness to sky-opening euphoria.
In 1990, Pills ‘n’ Thrills and Bellyaches cemented Happy Mondays as the wild-eyed mascots of the Madchester scene.
In 1996, Fishmans unveiled Long Season - a 35 minute dream-dub epic that drifts, loops and blossoms unlike anything else.